Pollan's political involvement began as a volunteer in the gubernatorial campaigns of Moderate RepublicanWinthrop Rockefeller. In 1970, she ran Rockefeller's unsuccessful reelection campaign in Fort Smith against the DemocratDale Bumpers. In 1972, she supported the unsuccessful challenge to Bumpers waged by Rockefeller's preferred candidate, Len E. Blaylock, whom she described as "a prince of a man." Pollan was elected in 1974 from a multi-seat legislative district that encompassed Sebastian County. The district was eventually divided into single-member seats. She is particularly remembered, through her chairmanship of the House Children and Youth Committee, as the author of the law which empowers the Arkansas State Police to investigate allegations of child abuse. During her time in the Arkansas House of Representatives, she sponsored or co-sponsored more than 250 pieces of legislation that became law. From 1980 to 1983, Pollan was legislative counsel and an informal advisor to Republican Governor Frank D. White. After White's election, Pollan and incoming gubernatorial chief of staffPreston Bynum of Siloam Springs, a former Arkansas House minority leader, prepared the 1981 budget—keeping the 1980 level of spending minus 5 percent. Pollan recalls a "stunned silence" over the state capital in Little Rock when White upset Governor Bill Clinton in 1980, a sense of disbelief among state employees and elected officials. Clinton returned to victory in 1982. After White's defeat in 1982, Pollan nominated University of Arkansas at Little Rock law professor Morris S. Arnold to become the new Republican Party state chairman to replace Bob Cohee of Baxter County. Pollan said that she hoped Arnold could bridge the gap in the Arkansas party between the former Rockefeller partisans, such as herself, and the burgeoning Reagan backers. Arnold, however, did not complete his term as a part-time chairman and was replaced by the first vice-chairman, Robert "Bob" Leslie, a former candidate for Arkansas's 1st congressional district seat. In her early legislative years, Pollan was frequently one of only a half dozen Republicans among the one hundred House members. Her early GOP colleagues, all originally from the northwestern part of the state, included Bynum, Jim L. Smithson of Marshall, the seat of Searcy County, C. W. Melson of Ozone, Jerry D. King of Greenwood in Sebastian County, and Richard L. Barclay of Rogers in Benton County. In the early 1980s, she was a colleague of Republican Judy Petty from a Little Rock-based district. Petty waged two publicized congressional campaigns in 1974 and 1984 against Wilbur Mills and Tommy F. Robinson, respectively. Pollan won her last election in 1996 without Democratic opposition. Pollan left the House because of term limits. She was then on the senior staff of Republican Governor Mike Huckabee as Legislative Liaison. Huckabee in 2003 named her to the Arkansas Oil and Gas Commission.
Civic affairs
Pollan is a former chairman of the Arkansas Center for Health Improvement. She formerly owned the Carolyn Pollan Patent Model Museum in Fort Smith, an exhibit of patent models from the early years of the founding of the United States. After its first year of operation, the museum was free to the public. She later sold her collection to another museum in New York State. A descendant of Union veterans, Pollan has written related articles for the Fort Smith Historical Society Journal. She was involved in literacy education in Fort Smith and worked to develop procedures to encourage recipients of public welfare to obtain employment.
Personal life
Pollan married George Angelo Pollan, a Fort Smith native. They have two married children, Cee Cee Hollimon and Robert E. "Rob" Pollan, both of Fort Smith, and four grandchildren. She is a member of the Grand Avenue Baptist Church in Fort Smith.